The Dr. Hyman Show - The 5 Pillars That Will Transform Your Health In 2026
Episode Date: December 15, 2025Ready to feel better than you ever have? Here are five ways to your best health in 2026—simple shifts that work faster than most people realize: food as medicine, restorative sleep, stress mastery, ...daily movement, and periodic detox resets. Eating real, whole foods sends powerful healing signals to your gut, hormones, and genes, while avoiding processed foods removes the biggest drivers of inflammation. Quality sleep and stress-lowering practices help rebalance cortisol so you can think clearly, feel calmer, and have steady energy throughout the day. Moving your body strengthens your metabolism, protects your brain, and keeps you functional as you age. And short detox periods that remove sugar and processed foods while adding nutrient-dense meals can reboot your entire system and show you just how good “normal” is supposed to feel. When you bring these five pillars together you create momentum that touches every part of your life. In this episode, I highlight how five simple foundations—food, sleep, stress management, movement, and detox—can completely transform your health, showing that you have far more power to heal and thrive than you’ve ever been told. This episode is brought to you by BIOptimizers. Head to bioptimizers.com/hyman and use code HYMAN to save 15%. Full-length episodes can be found here:How To Use Food As Medicine How To Stay Asleep And Sleep More Deeply How Chronic Stress Creates Hormonal Havoc How Much And What Types Of Exercise Are Needed To Age Well? How To Do The 10-Day Detox
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Coming up on this episode of the Dr. Hyman Show,
what you put at the end of your fork is more powerful than anything you'll ever find in a prescription bottle.
It works faster, better and cheaper.
Food, I didn't even think we should call it medicine.
It's like a miracle cure because it's so powerful.
Before we...
The holidays are supposed to be joyful, but for many of us, they're stressful.
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Magnesium is responsible for over 600 processes in the body, including sleep, muscle relaxation,
mood and stress response.
Most of us are deficient without even knowing it.
That's why I take magnesium breakthrough from bioptimizers.
It has all seven essential forms of magnesium in one capsule so your body can actually
absorb and use it.
This holiday season, give your body what it needs to feel calm and sleep better.
Visit bioptimizers.com slash hymen and use code hymen to say 15%.
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What actually isn't a good diet?
And I've written a lot about this.
I wrote, food, what like should I eat?
The pagan diet.
There's no guessing what I think.
But essentially, it's whole real food.
You know, I kind of used to do a lot of speaking in churches with the Daniel plan I did.
And I used to say, it's really easy and favorite what to eat.
And I just asked you to have one question.
Did God make this or did man make this?
Did God make an avocado?
Yeah.
Did God make a Twinkie?
No.
Did man make an avocado?
No.
It's pretty easy.
Even a kid in kindergarten could figure out what.
to eat. So ask yourself next time you go buy something, who made this? Was it coming from nature
in God or was it just coming from a factory somewhere? And then you should, you know, you should,
you should probably stay away from the stuff that's not actually made by God or nature. So you want
to eat whole foods, real food, lots of plant foods. 80% of your diet should be unprocessed whole
plant foods, vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds. Obviously, some grains and beans are good, some aren't.
Like gluten is a problem, especially modern wheat. You probably want to stay away from that.
You need to eat foods that have good fats in them, avocados, nuts, olive, well, fatty fish, like sardines, macral herring.
You also want to eat a lot of fiber.
So that's going to happen naturally as you eat a lot of plant foods.
You want to make sure you have prebiotic foods like plantains and artichokes and asparagus.
And I even sometimes add that from a microbiome.
You also want polyphenols for your microbiome, things like cranberry and pomegranate and green tea and all these prickly-leaf extract and all these different things that you can use to actually.
actually increase the growth of the good bugs in your gut because that determines so much
your health. You're not only feeding yourself, you're feeding all those guys in there. And then you can also
take fermented foods, things like tempe and sauerkraut and miso and kimchi. These are all
foods that are traditionally made in diets because we had to preserve our food in the past.
We didn't have refrigerators. So we had a way of preserving all this stuff. And also protein is
important. Now, especially as we get older. Now, you don't want too much protein, but you want
enough protein. And you want the right kind of protein. And I've written a lot about this, especially
in my book Young Forever.
But there's a, there's basically a few, the rule is a palm size,
full of size amount of protein in most meals.
And this can be, you know, plant proteins, but often need a lot more.
And that's seeds, grains and beans are okay.
But they're lower quality.
They don't have all the amino acids you need for, or in the right volumes for building
muscle, particularly as you get older.
So I like grass-fed meat.
I like paste-raised chicken.
I like pasture-raised eggs.
I like small wild fish.
I like goat way.
These are my kind of go-toe proteins.
So that's what I think.
Tofu Tempe are probably the most dense plant-based proteins.
But you want to eat the right protein.
Now, what should we not be eating?
Well, it's stuff that's not food.
Obviously, there's only thing as junk food.
There's junk and there's food.
So obviously, if you see a label with 45 different ingredients, don't eat it.
If you can't pronounce the ingredients, don't need it.
If you don't recognize what the ingredients are, don't eat it.
You know, you can shop around the outside of your
grocery store. There's a few key tips that you should just stick to 100% never fall off of this.
There's no high fructose corn syrup every period. Why? Well, one is sugar and two is a special
form of sugar that does a lot more damage and is a lot more likely to cause harm. The next is
hydrogenated fats. So never eat anything with that. And it's supposed to be not safe to eat
according to the FDA, but it's still everywhere in the grocery stores. I don't know how they
get away with this, but seven years ago they said it's not safe to eat and it's still in the
grocery stores. You go figure. Anyway, I won't get into that. Refined vegetables,
want to stay away from that. Stay away from additive, chemicals, preservatives, pesticides. I mean,
I mean, if you wouldn't sprinkle it on your salad or on your vegetables at night, well, why would
you eat it? I mean, who has butylated hydroxytyluene in their cupboard? But that's the most
common preservative found in most processed food. Also, artificial sweeteners really bad. They
tend to cause bacterial overgrowth in the gut. They actually increase the risk of obesity and
diabetes. You don't want to do that and they'll wreck your health. So what's the number one take
home philosophy? Just that simple question. Did God make this or did man make this? And ask yourself
that next time you pick something up at the grocery store. Okay. So why is food the most important
medicine in your medical toolbox? Why is it the most important thing you could be focused on for
your health? And you know, I actually was watching a podcast yesterday with Rich Roll as a friend of mine.
And there was a guy who was a hundred years old on there.
And he's like, the most important thing is diet.
And he is right.
Now, it is the most powerful tool you have to change your health.
What you put at the end of your fork is more powerful than anything you'll ever find in a prescription bottle.
It works faster, better and cheaper.
It has the power to influence and improve the expression of tens of thousands of genes to optimize tens of thousands of protein networks, to balance your hormones, improve your brain chemistry, to,
upregulate your immune system and even to enhance your microbiome, and it works without any
side effects, except good ones. So this is really a drug. And I was giving you a quick story.
I've told the story before. It's so important to understand how quick and fast this is.
I had a patient, and this just patient illustrates this more than anything. She was part of our program
at Cleveland Clinic. She came to one of our groups called Functioning for Life. She was 66. She had
heart failure. She had angina, had multiple stents. She had type 2 diabetes on insulin for years,
hypertension. I mean, you name it. She had it. Her kidneys were failing. Her livers were failing.
Her liver was failing. Only one liver, right? I do remember that from medical school. And she was so sick.
And she was this big. Her body mass index was 43. 30 is considered obese. 40 is severely obese.
And she just was enormous. And she took insulin shots every day. She came to see us.
and she changed her diet.
And she did exactly what I'm going to tell you to do today.
And within three days of changing her diet,
she was off insulin.
And by the way, she was in a pile of pills
that cost $20,000 a year for her co-pay.
In three days, she was off insulin.
In three months, she was off her medications.
Her A1C, which is your average blood sugar
from 11, which is like almost hospitalized,
to five and a half, which is normal.
Her heart failure reversed.
Her kidneys normalized.
Her liver normalized.
She got her blood pressure pills,
and she lost a bunch of weight.
And after a year, she lost 116 pounds and had none of those conditions and was off all her medications.
There is no drug on the planet that can do that.
All those drugs were managing her diseases.
Food, I didn't even think we should call medicine.
It's like a miracle cure because it's so powerful.
And I've seen this over and over and over in my practice.
And I honestly, as a doctor, I've been doing functional medicine for a long time, okay, decades.
And I think I was the first one to say, you are not allowed to see.
a doctor in my practice unless you also see the nutritionist. Because if I'm a doctor and food
is medicine, then how am I going to practice without a nutritionist? That is fundamental,
fundamental to the premise of functional medicine. And there's five nutritionists that work with me
in my practice. They're awesome. So anyway, let's get back to it. So what is food? You know,
okay, it's protein, it's fat, it's calories, it's carbohydrates, it's fiber, it's vitamins,
minerals, but it's so, so much more. In every bite of food, there's only thousands of
informational molecules, like code that can upgrade or downgrade your biological software with
every single bite. Literally, you change your biological software. You change your genetic
expression. You change the way your hormones work, the way your immune system works. You change
which bugs you're growing in your gut, depending on which foods you eat. Literally, in real
time, not over decades or days, but literally within minutes. So it's so powerful. And we have the
ability to speak to our genes through food. And I think this is why it's so important to understand
how to use food as medicine. But by the way, okay, by the way, it's not suffering here. I'm not
talking about, you know, eating, you know, wheatgrass shots and a bunch of, you know,
oat brand or something. Like, I'm talking about yummy, delicious, tasty, amazing, gorgeous
food. I had a party for my office staff last night, and we had the most unbelievable array
vegetables and foods and dishes and flavors. I mean, nobody went away going, oh, this was
healthy food. They didn't even, they're not thinking, oh, this is healthy food because it just
tastes so good. So if it doesn't taste good, no one's going to eat it, right? But actually
food tastes good. And by the way, you might not know this, but flavor and food. And the reason
why the food industry puts so many chemicals and additives and colorings and flavorings and sugar and
salt in food is to make it taste good.
How do you take processed ingredients and make them taste edible?
You have to add all this crap.
But if you eat real food, inside the food are the molecules and give food its flavor.
So think about this.
If you ever grew a garden or had a fresh tomato grown in your organic garden and you went
like a cherry tomato or something, you went at the end of the summer in August and stuck
in your mouth, it's like an explosion of full.
flavor. Whereas if you take a tomato, it was like grown in some hot house and shipped across
the country and it was designed to be fit in a box in a certain size and square and not squish,
I mean, it looks like a tomato, but it doesn't taste very good. And the reason for the difference in
taste, the reason is the phytochemicals, these plant compounds that produce the flavor. But guess what?
Those phytochemicals that produce the flavor are also the medicines in food. So flavor and medicine in
food go together. Not the flavor that you add with all kinds of crap, but the actual flavor of
the food, right? Think about ripe peach at the end of the summer that melts in your mouth
and squishy and juicy. I'm really ready. Okay, so it is the end of summer. It's peach season.
So you want to just understand that you want to seek out flavor. And Dan Barber actually did a company
called Roe 7 Seas where he created a company to improve the flavor of foods by breeding them
to produce more flavor. But as a side effect, the way they get the flavor is through the
phytochemicals. So I want to sort of help you really understand this is so important.
Now, the next question I want to answer is, what is this whole field of nutrigenomics?
You might have heard about personalized nutrition or nutrigenetics or nutrigenomics.
This is the science of how food regulates your gene expression and your epigenetics.
When you eat, it's literally sending messages to turn genes on or off.
I'm going to turn on the antioxidant genes.
Or I'm going to turn on the anti-inflammatory genes.
Or I'm going to turn off the genes or cause cancer.
or I'm going to turn off the genes or cause cancer.
Or I'm going to turn on the genes and cause heart disease or turn off the genes
and cause heart disease.
So we really think of them as like the food as the little signals and the code that is
regulating your biological software.
And you want a new operating system that's an operating system of health and well-being.
Well, you have to put in the right code.
And the right code is the right food.
So, so, I mean, what messages are you sending to your biology when you eat a double
cheeseburger fries and a Coke?
Right.
What messages are you sending to your body if you're eating, like we had last night, this watercress salad,
we had this incredible watermelon gazpacho with mint.
We had, oh, my God, so many different things.
Eggplant with all kinds of spices and sauces on it.
It was so delicious.
And spices also are full of these phytochemical flavor things.
So there's so many ways that we should be thinking about how we regulate our body.
What if you had, you know, fresh wild salmon and wild berries, maybe wild strawberries?
You ever taste of wild strawberries?
is bursting with flavor and fresh wild greens like they had an icorea where they lived to be
100 years old. And that's a very different set of molecules that you're putting in your body
that regulate what's going on. So this is really about personal nutrition. It's about understanding
how genes are affected by what you eat. And then also we have to think about how each of us
are different. So, but as a whole framework, the power of food is medicine is huge.
This time of year can be packed with connection and
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tired, tense, or overwhelmed. One simple reason why. Most of us are deficient in magnesium.
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relaxing tight muscles, supporting digestion, and improving sleep quality. But most magnesium supplements
only include one or two forms, which your body can't fully absorb. That's why I take
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It makes us tired, hard to focus.
Basically, having sleep deprivation is basically equivalent to being drunk.
In terms of your performance, you know, I read a study once where they were snipers who were,
you know, excellent shots and that they had eight hours sleep, they were like 100% accurate.
If they had seven hours sleep, they were like 95% accurate.
If they had six hours sleep, they were like 70% accurate.
And if they were like less than six hours sleep, they were basically like 50%.
It's like almost hit and miss.
So not good.
even when you're an expert in something,
you can't function when you're tired.
So next to sort of nutrition exercise,
and maybe even before,
someone would argue,
sleep may be the fundamental foundation of health
and disease prevention and even weight control.
So why is it so important?
How to sleep dysfunction lead to change?
Well, there's a very important hormone called cortisol,
which is your stress hormone.
And it helps when it's in balance to go up in the morning
to get you energetic.
and focus and do the things you need to do for the day.
And at night, it's supposed to go down and you're supposed to calm down and relax.
Now, a lot of people have an inversion where their cortisol is all in the morning.
They can't get out of bed, and at night, they're tired and wired.
It's sound familiar.
I've been some of a big experience that I certainly have at different moments in my life.
When you get down in bed, you're exhausted, but you can't fall asleep because you're just wire.
That's to do with your adrenal glands.
And they're designed to keep things in balance to regulate your weight, to moderate your stress response,
to control blood sugar, regulate inflammation.
and regulate sleep and wake cycles.
So when we're constantly in a state of stress,
we're actually often struggling with sleep
because of the way in which it affects our sleep.
So when you're thinking about it,
when your cortisol's high, you're running from a tiger,
you're in danger, you don't want to be sleeping.
You want to be alert.
And that's the problem.
So if your cortisol levels are balanced
and they're high in the morning and then low at night
and your blood sugar stays even,
we'll talk about why that's important,
because fluctuations in bloodshare often will cause midnight or middle of the night awakening.
But when your cortisol and your body stress response imbalance, then your pineal gland
produces something called melatonin that pulses really strong in the afternoon and the evening,
which gets you ready for sleep and let your cortisol drop off and then you can feel calm
and go to sleep at night and feel sleepy.
And if you're healthy and balance in your circadian rhythms and your cortisol,
melatonin cycles, you'll be fine. But if your cortisol is high in the afternoon or high in the
evening, you might feel tired and wired. You'll want to sleep, but you can't. Or you might fall asleep
because you're really tired, and then you wake up in the middle of the night, like between one and four.
And that happens when you sort of go, go, go, go, go, do your email, you're working, working,
and then you go to bed, and you're like, and then you fall asleep because you're exhausted,
but you end up waking up because your body is still in a stress state, there's still high levels
cortisol. So how does how does stress affect your sleep wake cycles? Well, it works in a lot
different ways. Psychological stress can be a big factor, right? Worries about family, work,
money, physical stresses. Lack of exercise is a stress, believe it or not, too much screen time,
junk food, toxic lifestyles, hormonal imbalances, environmental toxins, all these drive increased
inflammation, increased brain inflammation, and also increased cortisol. Because by the way, do you
know this that when you eat sugar or starch, your body responds by jerking up the adrenaline and
cortisol levels. So literally eating sugar is a stressful experience to your body, even if you're
getting pleasure and you don't think it's stressful and you're meditating while you're eating
sugar, you're still going to have high cortisol and high adrenaline. So what are the things that
are the two most common things that are screwing up your sleep wake cycles.
It's probably blood sugar imbalances and spikes and crashes in blood sugar and chronic stress.
So what should you do to optimize nutrition so you can regulate your stress hormones through food and lifestyle?
And how do you deal with actually regulating sleep throughout the whole night and get high quality sleep?
So first thing is our bodies, whether we like it or not, are biological organisms.
and they run in circadian rhythms,
and they need to be balanced.
So you have to live in rhythm.
And I experienced the dangers of not being in rhythm
when I worked in the emergency room.
I would sometimes work seven in the morning
until five a night shift.
Then I'd work at two in the afternoon
until the two in the morning shift.
Then I'd work at 11 o'clock at night
to a seven in the morning shift.
Then I'd work in eight in the morning to an eight in the morning ship,
24 hours shift.
I was all over the place.
And my whole system became just regulated.
And ultimately, it led to chronic fatigue.
syndrome and a bunch of other stuff, my system just kind of collapsed because I was pushing
through all these circadian rhythms, which have to be in balance for you to be healthy.
And whether we like it or not, you know, we tend to do a lot better from our health
perspective. If we go to bed at the same time, if we wake at the same time, if we eat at the
same time, our bodies are designed like that. So you want to make sure that you actually
don't eat before bad, because that's the worst thing you can do. But you need to make sure
you're having meals are in a regular time space.
So don't eat three hours before bed.
Don't need a heavy meal before bed because that guarantee you that'll screw up your sleep.
Also, carbohydrates, I think if you want to actually eat some starchy things like sweet
potatoes or some more starchy foods and you can handle it metabolically, make sure you do it
at night because the serotonin levels go up and it helps with sleep when you have your
carbohydrates, but still don't eat white flour, sugar, all that processed food.
Also, not eating enough is stressful.
If your body's not getting enough food, it's also considerative stress.
Now, you can do time-restrict eating and you can sort of narrow the window in which you eat for longevity purposes and so on.
But you also want to make sure you're getting enough food and not actually starving because that will increase cortisol and you'll wake in the middle of the night.
Now, if you want to lose weight, you can use what I think is probably the most effective treatment I've ever found, which is the 10-day detox diet.
I help people lose 120, 130, 200 pounds.
It's like a gastric bypass without the pain of surgery vomiting and malnutrition.
Another thing you can do is get stuff out of your head.
You write your worries down at night.
So get a little piece of paper or journal or maybe in your phone.
Write down all your worries, what you have to do.
Your days should be organized for the next day.
Free up your mind so you can actually let go of things and go into a deep breathful sleep.
Next, you can try a number of supplements and things that I found very helpful.
Magnesium is super important.
It's the relaxation mineral.
It helps regulate the stress response, helps you regulate cortisol, helps relax your muscles.
I recommend 2 to 400, even more of magnesium glycinate before bed.
Glycine also helps with sleep, so you can use glycine.
And you can use that to help relax the nervous system and your muscles.
Next, try some melatonin.
Mallow out with little melatonin.
You can use half to, up to two to three milligrams of melatonin at night.
and that can often help you reset your circadian rhythms,
particularly with travel.
Also, Ashwaganda is an Ayvavidic herb that can be really powerful for resetting cortisol.
I use a product called cortisol manager, which helps at night to reduce the stress response
and improve sleep quality.
Also, make sure, as I said, to get in rhythm, you know, or you can sleep at the same time.
Try to go to sleep before 10.
That's the best sleep you can have is before midnight.
believe it or not so didn't bed by 10 try to be asleep shortly thereafter 11 at the latest
and try to wake up at the same time every day also make your bedroom completely sleep
supportive for example make sure you have eye shades or blackout shades on your windows or
eyes shades on your eyes ear plugs if it's noisy make sure you you really take care of
creating a carefully controlled environment next is caffeine you know some is tolerated okay
and metabolize it others don't so I
encourage you to sort of maybe stop after breakfast coffee, don't have coffee throughout the
day. That's particularly important. If you're still struggling, I would probably just stop coffee
and caffeine altogether. Alcohol definitely screws up sleep. So if you want to sleep well and you're
not sleeping well, quit alcohol. Just get off it. It can interrupt sleep. It creates poor sleep
quality. Also, sunlight is basic great medicine. You mean, what I mean? Sunlight, I'm going to go
to sleep. No, but 20 minutes of sunlight in the morning without sunglasses on.
outdoors, not behind a window, has a big effect on your circadian rhythms.
So we are a photobiomodulating organisms.
The light affects us.
It regulates her biology.
And it's important to make sure you have a good 20 minutes of light exposure in the morning.
Chronic stress is deadly.
It kills us.
Literally kills us from heart disease, cancer, dementia.
I mean, just literally being stressed and having high stress levels chronically will shrink
the memory center of your brain called the hippocampus.
It also makes you gain weight.
and it causes you to be diabetic, and it causes a whole host of other things,
including depression and infertility and sexual dysfunction.
I mean, you name it.
Stress is a killer.
So we now understand how stress impacts our biology in a real practical way.
It is, in fact, the biggest thing that's driving so many of the dysfunctions we see around chronic illness,
and it either makes worse or causes most of the things we see every day in medical practice,
how well it stress jacks up your cortisol levels which then causes your muscles to waste away
your blood pressure to go up your blood sugar to go up uh increases belly fat causes your memory to go
down and you see this phenomenon of weight gain insulin resistance and diabetes ultimately even
type three diabetes which we are now refer to as dementia so when you when you also are stressed
you reduce you produce adrenaline and adrenaline also makes you feel hyper anxious
irritable, gets your heart rate up, your blood pressure up, causes your blood clot more likely,
damage your brain's memory center, and just causes a lot of bad problems. So if you're, you know,
thinking about your daily life, when you are going about your day, if you start off the wrong way,
you're going to be in trouble. And one of the things we don't realize is that stress is also controlled
by what we eat. Our diet plays an enormous role in our stress response. And so when we eat certain
foods, it literally jacks up adrenaline and cortisol. What foods are those? Sugar and starch.
Basically, anything that turns to sugar in your body is seen as a biological stress.
Even if you think you're happy and relaxed while you're eating it, the consequences in your
body are just like those of when you're attacked by a mugger or you're being chased by a tiger.
The real physiological responses that happen in relation to a woman.
our daily lives are no different depending on what the stress is.
So whether you're running from a tiger or being, you know, being upset with your spouse
or you imagine somebody's mad at you and they're really not, the stress response is the same.
In fact, stress is defined as the real or imagined threat to your body or your ego.
So it could be a real threat to your body like a tiger chasing you or it could be an imagined
threat to your ego.
Maybe you think your boss is mad at you and is going to fire you, but actually doesn't think
that at all and wants to give you a race.
you have the thought, the thought creates a stress response.
So our thoughts create our biology, and we have to learn how to manage our minds in order
to manage our biology.
And so let's talk sort of a little bit about diet again, because what we found from
the studies is that when you eat food, it's not all the same.
Food is information.
It's not just calories.
And the information in processed food and starch and sugar increase our stress hormones,
adrenaline and cortisol.
And I remember one study, they looked at overweight kids, I think boys, and they, teenage boys,
and they gave them three different breakfast, an omelet, steel-cut oats, and regular oats.
What was interesting is that they were all identical in calories.
So the calories are the same.
And what they did was they did these kids, why don't you go and sit in this room and hang out,
read, play games, whatever you want to do.
But when you're hungry, you just hit this button and bring you food.
And so what they found out was when the kids had the oatmeal, they ate 81% more food.
than the omelet, even though it was the same calories over the course of the day.
And with the steel cutouts, it was still 51% more food.
But what was interesting was that they also had a catheter in their blood vessels,
and they drew their blood every little bit.
And they found that when the kids ate the oatmeal,
it was like a stress response in the body there.
Not only their insulin and blood sugar went up,
but their adrenaline and their cortisol went up.
So when we eat refined foods, they are hugely damaging.
So just in the same way, you can eat food to actually help reduce your cortisol.
level. You can actually balance your insulin levels. You can actually reduce adrenaline by eating
foods that help you calm your nervous system, which are whole real foods. Good, healthy fats,
like olive oil, avocados, nuts and seeds, high quality protein, regeneratively raised animal foods,
eggs, chicken, fish, regenerative raised meats. You know, even whole beans and whole grains can be
very calming and helpful, although if you eat too much starch and your insulin resistance, it can still
be a problem. And then, of course, all the plant foods, very much. Very much. And then, of course, all the plant foods,
They just are super full of phytochemicals, anti-inflammatory compounds, stress-reducing
compounds, and they're really powerful.
So when you shift your diet, you're literally going to change your stress response and change
your biology.
So what can you do other than looking at your mindset?
Because a lot of a stress we respond to is the creation of our mind.
You know, Gabramate, who's written a lot about trauma, which is real trauma, he says,
trauma is not what happens to you.
It's the meaning you make from what happens to you.
So two people can experience the same event and have very different responses
and it can be registered very different in their biology.
So it's important to understand that you have to get your mind straight.
And that's not as easy as it sounds because we are kind of conditioned to believe our thoughts.
And, you know, my friend, Daniel Ayman says, you know, we should stop the ants in our head,
the automatic negative thoughts.
Easier said than done, but it's an important practice to start witnessing and looking at your mind.
some of the practices that I'm going to share with you now are very effective in helping us reset
our minds as well as our bodies. The first is I deal with the root causes of stress, right? So there
can be physical stresses like a disease. I mean, I had mercury poisoning, Lyme disease, mold toxicity.
These create a stress in the body. So you have to deal with whatever true physical stress there
are and get rid of them, gluten, nutritional deficiencies, all the things that are really
driving so much disease. And we see this in functional medicine. And it really is,
is looking at the whole scope of what creates balance or imbalance in the body and dealing
with that.
But once you've done that, and there are no sort of objective external stresses, how do you
start to reset?
Well, you have to learn to actively relax.
It's something we don't get taught.
We don't have to sleep and eat and exercise, but most of us don't understand that we
have to actively relax.
It's not just sitting on a couch watching TV, is actually helping your body get into what we
call a parasympathetic state.
And this is not as easy.
it sounds. You can do it through meditation. You can do it through breath work. You can do it through
a prayer, through chanting, through yoga, through various kinds of things that help your body
reset your nervous system from an overactive, stressed, sympathetic response to what we call
the relaxation response. Meditation is a very powerful tool. It's available to all of us.
It's free. You can learn how to do it online. There's courses.
programs. You can read a book about it. It's not that hard to do. It's basically just sitting and
watching your thoughts and not getting caught up in them, but letting them pass using your breath
as an anchor or a mantra. There's a lot of different techniques out there. Exercise also is a powerful
stress reducer. Think about it. When you're running from a tiger, you know, you're producing huge
amounts of stress hormones and then you run and you burn them off. That's what happens is a book called
Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers by Robert Sapolsky, who studied baboons and stress response actually
and the hierarchy in Baboon Societies.
And I highly recommend his book,
A Primate's Memoir, which describes his research.
But he wrote another book called Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers,
which is based, oh, no, I think that was written by John Cabin's Inn.
Sorry, no, I can't remember.
Anyway, one of those guys.
And the book basically said, you know,
the zebra is out there eating his grass and hanging out,
and there's all the other zebras.
And the lion comes, started chasing them,
and they all run like crazy, highly stressed.
And then the lion catches one of them,
and then the lion eats the zebra he caught.
and then the other zebras just go back to eating the grass, even though the lines still
standing there.
So they discharge the stress.
We don't.
We continue to accumulate the stress.
So exercise is a great way to reduce depression, anxiety, improve mood, to reduce stress
response in the body.
And that's why you often feel relaxed and calm after exercising.
Other techniques are really good, breathwork techniques, saunas, cold plunges, a lot of things
that now are being used to help with longevity and biohacking also help to reduce the stress response.
My favorite is a hot steam and a cold dip, and that really just kind of cuts all the stress
for me, a hot bath with Epsom salt, very easy to do.
There's also some supplements you can take.
We use a lot of nutrients when we're stressed, vitamin C, the B complex vitamins, vitamin B5, zinc,
magnesium.
Magnesium is so important.
It's the relaxation mineral.
So I highly recommend that people take magnesium.
to calm their nervous system.
Herbs can be very helpful.
Adaptogenic herbs can help you manage stress.
The astronauts were using it,
and the Russian astronauts often took these compounds like rodeola,
Siberian ginseng, cordyceps, ginseng, ashwaganda.
These are we call adaptogenic herbs
that help modulate the stress response.
Also, adaptogenic mushrooms,
Asha, and Rishi, and many, many others
are very effective for helping modulate the nervous system.
Now, look at your mind.
Find a way to look at your beliefs, your attitudes,
how you respond,
choices you have you know i think uh uh victor frankl who was an auschwitz survivor said you know between
stimulus and response there's a pause and in that pause lies a choice and that choice lies your freedom
and i think all of us have just kind of collapsed that stimulus response or just reactive instead of
slowing down and looking at our beliefs our thoughts and he he in the concentration camp chose not to be
angry or mad at his nazi uh captors um i remember uh when i was young medical students
and I went to Nepal, and I met with a Tibetan doctor who'd been in a Chinese gulag for 22 years,
and I said to him, I said, what was the hardest part about being a prisoner in this Chinese
gulag?
And he said, well, they were a few times when I thought I would lose my compassion for my Chinese jailers.
And I thought, wow, this guy was in jail for 22 years in a gulag.
And that was his biggest stress was thinking that he could lose his compassion for his Chinese jailers.
So that just shows you the power of the money.
to relate to your environment in quite a different way.
So let's talk about what are the biological systems that are improved by exercise?
It has to be the right type of exercise, the right dose, right frequency.
And we'll talk about what that is.
But it improves the health of your immune system.
It boosts the number of your mitochondria, the powerhouse of your cells.
It balances your blood sugar and your insulin, your adrenal glands, your thyroid, your sex
hormones. It helps you improve detoxification, your circulation, your lymphatic flow, and even
optimizes your microbiome. That's right, your gut bacteria. It also does some amazing things about
the hallmarks of aging. Now, in my new book, Young Forever, here it is, everybody, super excited about
it. It's out February 21st. And in the book, I talk about something called the hallmarks of aging.
We've covered on the podcast a little bit. These are the things that go wrong as we age that
underlie all disease. If we cured all cancer and heart disease from the face of the planet, we might extend
life by five to seven years. But if we address the hallmarks of aging and the causes of the
hallmarks of aging, we might get 30 or 40 years of life extension. And you know what the deal is
about exercise? It addresses many of these hallmarks. For example, it increases telomere length. It reduces
inflammation. It improves your mitochondrial health. It impacts your nutrient sensing pathways like
insulin signaling and mTOR and MPK and certua, things we've talked about. It also improves your
epigenome and reverses your biological age. Now, you might be going, well, what are we
to do? Run a marathon every day? No, you don't. It doesn't take a lot of exercise. Even starting
with something as simple as 10 minutes a day can add a significant benefit to your health.
And if you do more, more vigorous exercise, interval training, string training, you can
extend your health span by leaps and bounds literally. You can stay fit and strong and functioning
well into your 80s, 90s, hundreds. I just read something pretty interesting that
Right now, there's about half a million centenarians around the world.
And pretty soon, by I think 2050, there'll be about three and a half million people
living over 100 years old, which is pretty amazing.
There's two of the oldest people now around about 115 years old.
So many of us are able to reach that age.
So if you look at what you need to do, you know, combine with diet, exercise is really the
most powerful tool for staying healthy and extending your life.
My mom used to say, whenever she had the urge to exercise, she would lie down until it went away, which I think she got from any young men or some comedian.
But she followed that advice, unfortunately, and she didn't exercise, despite my hounding her, of course, parents never listen to their kids.
I mean, kids, whatever, something like that, parents never listen to their kids.
And she ended up being pretty frail and disabled the last decade of her life and not too functioning.
So when you start thinking about how to take this approach of incorporating movement and exercise in your life, you can get really amazing benefits.
I'm just going to kind of go through them because they're just so profound.
It actually unlocks the body's longevity switches, the regenerative and reparative systems that are built into our biology.
It activates all the longevity switches that I talk about in the book, particularly the four that have to do with nutrient sensing pathways that are sort of mess.
to everything else, insulin signaling, mTOR, which is really important in terms of autophagy
and cleaning up your cells, certulins, which are important in DNA repair, and also NPK,
which helps regulate blood sugar, insulin sensitivity, inflammation, and many other things.
So it's pretty, pretty darn exciting.
It also activates the body's antioxidant systems.
It improves your cognitive function and your mood.
It supports, I mean, they found that just walking helps prevent dementia, which is pretty
goal. It supports your microbiome. It reduces inflammation. It helps you produce more mitochondria
and help them work better and be more efficient and have better function because mitochondria is where
you make energy. And as you get older, you lose energy, so you want to boost that. It also keeps you
strong and functional. You know, I just came back from skiing out in Switzerland and I had really
great time. It was privileged to be able to go there. And I was amazed. Like, I was just skiing along
like I was when I was 30 or 40. And I would probably go on a little too fast.
But, you know, I like to do that.
And, you know, I felt strong and able to do it.
And it was keeping up with people half my age.
So I think the body has the capacity at Nitiage to do this.
It also makes you happier and improves your mood and even improves your sex life, believe it or not.
So what does the research say?
And let's talk about some of the nitty gritty about how it works.
If you really, you know, maybe you want to know about the science, maybe that'll motivate you.
I probably doesn't motivate most people, but it kind of gets me all excited.
I kind of like that.
I'm a little weird.
But it really, the research is just, it's just unbelievable by exercise.
When I started to dig into, you know, obviously you can look at exercise in anything and
search on PubMed and learn about it.
But I started to look at exercise and longevity and what it does.
So we covered a little bit of this, but I want to sort of expand on it.
It improves your telomeres, which are little caps at the end of your chromosomes that
start to shorten as you get older and shorten your life.
It actually lengthens your telomeres by exercising.
It protects your telomeres.
It optimizes all these longevity.
which is like AMPK, which regulates blood sugar.
People say, oh, I'm going to take metformin for longevity.
Well, exercise is way better than metformin for regulating AMPK.
It also activates certuance, which help DNA repair, reduce inflammation, and improve your
blood sugar control, which are really important.
It also improves your cardiovascular and heart health, we all know.
It reduces the risk of heart attacks and strokes and improves your brain function and
cognitive function.
It also helps certain types of cancer, as I said.
But, you know, we see the regulation of our biology through exercise being meted through
all these mechanisms that have to do with immunity and cancer prevention.
So it's super great.
And, of course, it extends your health span and your lifespan.
I remember being in Sardinian.
I mentioned this guy, I think, before, but his name is Pietro.
He was 95 years old.
And he was like a shepherd.
And he was just running up and down the mountains all day, five miles a day in this really
regular terrain.
And he was bolt upright, you know, booming voice, clear eyes, strong and mentally sharp.
And I was like, wow, this guy's 95 years old.
You know, most people in 95 in America barely can kind of walk across the street or get
from their bedroom to the bathroom.
And here he is, you know, running up the mountain.
So we have the ability to do that.
And he exercised every day as a shepherd, not, quote, exercise, but he just, that was his life.
It also, it's incredible for diabetes, for blood sugar control.
I mean, just walking after dinner is a great way to keep your blood sugar down,
helps you become more insulin sensitive.
And very importantly, it helps you build muscle mass and function.
Because as you get older, you lose muscle.
It's called sarcopenia, and that leads to all these hormonal and metabolic changes that
accelerate aging and lower testosterone, high cortisol, the stress hormone, higher blood sugar,
worsening cholesterol.
I mean, just lower growth hormone and increased cortisol, like I said, it's just,
it's really bad news.
So building muscle is really important, and that's clearly only done by exercise.
So hopefully, listening all this, you realize you can't afford not to move.
my basically philosophy is if you don't move you won't literally it'll be dead um so how can you
actually incorporate more movement what can you do without having to drag yourself to the gym
now i go to the gym sometimes but i rather play uh and i i think um there's a lot of options and
you can just do simple things like uh start with simple things even five minutes a day and if you
don't have five minutes a day to do something there's something wrong with your life so you better
look at that. So, you know, for example, I, I figured out I couldn't do 10 pushups when I was 50.
So I started, I'm going to do push-ups. So I take a shower most days. So I basically would wait for
the shower heat up because it was, it's, I live in a barn and it's really tall and it takes a while
without water to get upstairs. And I would do push-ups. And I went for me, well, not able to do 10
to be able to do almost 100 push-ups without stopping. So we, we can train our bodies and it's
really simple. Or maybe while your coffee's brewing, maybe do some stretching and yoga.
Walker, bike instead of driving. And many, many countries, they do this. I, I just met this guy
who was a seal of a big company and he lived in Switzerland and he, I mean, he runs a $6 billion
company. And he, and he rides his bike straight up the hill or the matches of the mountain
to work, 2,000 feet elevation every day. And he's in an incredible shape. He's 53 years old and
is VO2 Max, which is a measure of fitness, is that of an elite athlete and someone who's like
half his age. So it's very impressive. You don't have to sort of, you know, do something like that,
but just, you know, parking further away in the parking lot, taking the stairs instead of the
elevator, the escalator, just simple things to start moving. Also try a standing desk or a
stability ball. If you're, you know, at a desk, you sit on a ball, it kind of helps you move and
move your body and increase your core string. I have a friend, Mike Royzen, who was a
even clinic with me. And he used to have a treadmill desk. He was on calls and working and working
on his computer and walking all day long, which is impressive. Make your leisure time, active time.
So if you're watching TV or movie, maybe put a stationary bike in your house. I remember I worked
at Idaho as a family doc and there was this patient that came in and she lost like 100 pounds.
I'm like, what happened to you? And she's like, well, I decided instead of sitting in front of the TV and
eating all day, I would get a stationary bike and just ride the bike all day instead of eating.
She did, and she lost 100 pounds.
So pretty impressive.
Maybe also you can listen to podcasts and an audiobook or do something like that when you're
exercising or taking a walk and just makes it more fun and motivating.
And also do it with somebody else.
As my friend Rick Warren said, everybody needs a buddy.
So it's important that if you maybe are having some trouble getting out there and doing stuff,
find somebody else to do it with.
It's much more fun for me to play test with somebody else or play basketball or going
on a bike with somebody else and do by myself.
So I try to do with friends.
And it's way more fun.
Maybe pickleball is the latest craze.
Join a pickleball league and go outside and just do fun stuff.
So maybe the 10-day detox.
You're basically taking out the bad stuff and putting into good stuff.
You're taking all the foods that cause inflammation that are toxic.
to your system that are inflammatory,
the best with your gut,
and you're putting in foods
that actually help reset your system.
And it's pretty much a very simple approach.
It's lots of veggies, so mostly veggies,
lots of good fat,
lots of fiber,
lots of good clean protein.
And what does that look like?
It's tons of non-starchy veggies,
like broccoli, any kind of veggie you think of up,
it's not basically a potato.
You know, sometimes you're okay for people.
Avocados, good shout to avocados, olive oil, nuts and seeds, lots of good protein,
grass-fed, organic regenerative meat, fish chicken.
Sometimes, you know, for vegetarians, we can, you know, for vegetarians, we can use plant-based
proteins like tempe or non-GMO organic soy, tofu.
Those are the most dense sources of protein, but you do need protein as you detoxify.
So for the 10 days, you're going to be getting rid of all the other jobs, right?
processed food, other carbs, sugar, dairy, coffee, gluten, alcohol, pretty much actually all
grains and beans.
And the reason we get rid of grains and beans, they're necessarily all bad, is a lot of
people have issues.
A lot of people have issues with their gut.
A lot of people have issues with inflammation.
A lot of people have issues with insulin resistance and prediabetes and obesity, and they can
be problematic for these people.
So basically get off all the best stuff.
Now, it's not calorie counting.
You can eat as much as you want.
We're not like crazy how much macronutrients and percent of this and percent of that.
No, it's just pick the right foods and we focus on what to eat.
You don't have to focus on how much to eat, right?
So when you look at your plate, it can basically look like this.
Three quarters of it should be non-stargy veggies.
And I usually often will put two or three veggies in my dinner.
I'll make mushrooms.
I'll have a, you know, broccoli.
I'll make some, maybe a salad.
So I have lots of veggies.
And I'll have a portion of protein that's essentially the size of my pump.
Four to six ounces, we're usually 30 to 40 grams of protein.
Now, it's a good amount of protein, but you don't need that much if you're having
in all protein.
It should be very generally raised, should be pasture raised chicken, wild caught fish,
should be low mercury, obviously, all that.
And we'll put all that show notes, lots of good fats with dinner, like avocados, nuts and seeds,
olive oil, and your veggies.
You can even use, for example, ghee, which is a kind of butter, but it actually has
the inflammatory proteins remove casein and weight.
It basically has just the fat.
It's called clarified butter.
Very common.
You can get my book, Thending Detox Diet, you can get the Tenday Detox Diet cookbook, whatever
you want, put all the show notes and links together.
I do call it the Tenday Detox Diet Diet, but sometimes you need to do it longer, like two
weeks, three weeks, ten months, maybe.
even 10 years, depending on this situation. But we're going to talk about the 10 days and how
powerful that can be to transform your help. Now, I find that most people have never connected
the dots between how they feel and what they eat. They walk around with what I call
FLST syndrome. That's when you feel like crap. And that is a big problem for people. What do I mean by
that? Well, you might be tired, sluggish. You might have brain fog.
Maybe you have digestive issues, refluck, heartburn, earw bowel, maybe you have nasal congestion, sinus issues, muscle aches, joint pains, headaches, insomnia.
Should I go on?
Rashes, acne.
I mean, it goes on and on and on.
And many of these things are caused by food.
And the only way to know is to do a total body reset.
Like hitting the reset button on your commuter when all the systems are jammed, it's a complete reboot.
So how do you do a reboot?
It's very powerful.
And most people have a narrow experience system.
This is why I love to do with people.
And I actually run programs all around the world where people can come and actually
experiences.
We do programs where we have people do this just in five days, not even 10 days.
People have a 70% reduction in all symptoms from all diseases.
Now, I'm going to put in the show notes the medical symptom questionnaire that I use in my practice,
which essentially gives you a score based on the degree and frequency and severity of symptoms.
So if you have a headache, is it at zero, meaning never, or four, I get it all the time,
it really dab, or some version in between.
And then you get a score at the end, and, you know, people have a score of 60, 70, 100.
It should be less than 10, maybe even zero.
Ideally, I usually have the symptoms.
It's not normal for human beings to suffer this much.
And that's really why I created this book and the program, the 10-day detox side,
because I was doing this with my patients and seeing such incredible result.
So I do this personally regularly.
I do it at least two or three times a year, four times a year to really reset.
my system to kind of get my body back on track to get rid of all the bad stuff putting all the good
stuff now i want to walk you through how to do this uh i'm going to teach you how to hit the reset
button uh reboot your system and to optimize your biology to help your gut you help your detox system
to help your immune system you help reset your nervous system and it's powerful so uh if you want
to really see how your body can feel and get rid of what we call fLC syndrome
I would do this. Most people are like the frog that's in cold water where you turn the heat up
slowly and it starts to boil the death. We just kind of get used to it and think it's normal.
These symptoms are not normal. I want to do this with a junior high school once and the teachers
are like, well, we might have to get permission from the parents to see if it's safe. You know,
maybe they don't want their children doing this. I'm like, what, is it safe to eat fruits and vegetables
and nuts and seeds and protein and cut out sugar and starch and processed food.
I mean, they should get a note that it's permission to eat the junk food that they have
in school.
It's the opposite.
No, no, yes, it's very safe.
Anybody can do this.
And some people, by the way, you know, need more of certain things or other things.
But basically, this is a very universal approach to resetting your system.
A second pillar, aside from which you eat, the food is really important.
And by the need to be approaching the morning, you need to make sure you get rid of sugar and starch in the morning.
is super important.
And many people start their day with carbs,
which is the worst thing you can do,
sugar, sweetened coffees, teas,
cereals, muffins, bagels, breads.
Second pillar are your daily habit.
Essentially you love a pattern of eating and living
that puts your body back in rhythm.
It helps you reset your nervous system.
And there's a few really important habits
as part of the 10-duty time.
One is when you eat and also when you sleep.
Let's talk about when you eat.
Now, when you eat might be as important
as what you eat.
So many of us don't eat in the right pattern.
We tend to, you know, eat all day long.
We tend to snack.
We tend to eat before bed.
We snack late at night.
It's kind of bad.
So basically, when you eat, it's very important.
Research shows that doing that can really be bad for your help if you eat at night.
So the first is make sure you give yourself at least 12 to 14 hours between dinner and breakfast.
So dinner is six.
Breakfast at eight, that's a 14-hour fat, okay?
If you eat at six and then you keep snacking all night, that doesn't count, right?
And it's the most simple form of what we're called time-restricted eating.
And it's basically getting our body a rest and getting the body to reset.
And I wrote a lot about this in my book, The Young Forever, but basically there's all the process at night that happens called autophagy and clean up and repair.
You want to eat your body the ability to do that.
The next is food.
Now, you can do a breakfast if you're eating, you know, for example, dinner at six and breakfast
at eight or so.
That's a 14-hour fast.
Really important to have protein in the morning are not carbs and sugar.
Also, not eating three hours before bed.
It's really important.
So most people eat and snack after dinner, don't do that.
Have at least three hours the time you eat and you go to sleep.
That way you will lose weight.
Your body can repair and heal instead of trying to digest and store the food.
What about sleep?
Sleep is one of the most underrated.
have helped. It's probably even before exercise, meditation, maybe even before nutrition,
because when you don't sleep well, you're going to eat tons of sugar and carbs. You're going to
crave more. So you want to focus on sleep and restore to rest. We know that getting in a routine
of waking and sleeping can help with a deeper, more restful sleep. So try to take the same bedtime
every night, try to get off your screens for an hour two before bed, keep your room, or use blue
block your glasses, keep your room dark and cold, probably 55 to 68, really important because
your body does much better with sleep at night.
Try to relax at night with meditation, do a guided imagery, do breath for, stretching,
journaling, gratitude, practice, whatever you like, but do something.
Very important.
So your evening routine should be like set of bedtime and stick it over the 10 days,
turn your phone off and get it out of your bedroom, turn the TV off for at least an hour
or two before you go to bed, and then use the time at night to read, to journal, to meditate,
to connect with the people you love, and just kind of wind down.
down. The third pillar is extra support we need on the journey, right? Now, we all need nutrients.
They're called vitamins because they were vital amines, vital to life, right? And so we've seen
a dramatic reduction in the nutrient density of our food, our organic matter's gone out
of our soil, nutrients can't be extracted, foods travel long differences. We have commodity crops
such a bread to actually breed out the nutrients and in the starch and, you know, yield.
And so foods aren't nutritious as they once were.
And probably 90% of Americans, according to the government-owned surveys, are deficient
in one or more nutrients at the minimum level to prevent deficiency.
So how much vitamin need or do you need to not get rickets?
Not very much, like 30 units.
How much need for optimal health?
Probably three to five thousand.
So we need to really probably focus on nutrients.
And even with a perfect diet, you know, because none of us are a hunter-gatherers anymore
or, you know, kinds of food that we never ate and, I mean, nutrient depleted.
We need the basic supplements.
So we need a basic set of supplements.
It's a multibitamin mineral foundational.
Magnesium, a lot of us are deficient, probably 45% or low.
We're deficient magnesium.
It's involved in over 300 different enzymatic reactions.
Deeper important helps relax your nervous system at night.
It helps you calm down.
Also, people get constipated.
Sometimes when they change your diet.
So taking magnesium citric can help.
And lastly, vitamin D.
It's also sick fish oil, but vitamin D is really important.
Vitamin D over 80% is lower deficient in vitamin D.
It's involved in so many different things in the body.
So really important.
And it helps your mood, helps your muscle function, helps your brain, help your energy,
helps inflammation, autoimmunity.
It's just super important.
And most of us are low.
Fish oil is also important.
And I often recommend fish oil to people or omega-3 fat.
So what are the program steps in the 10-day-D time?
What should be the test?
And then we're going to go through the set.
The first step is to eat from the 10-day detox approved list for 10 days.
So eat what I'm telling you eat for whole foods.
You can do a whole-food base shake in the morning.
You could add protein powder, grass-fed protein if you want.
I have a grass-led protein called super-single protein.
But you really need to make sure you have a good breakfast.
Second is you mention daily habits, right?
Take your designated eating window, right?
You want a 12 to 14-hour overnight fast,
which means eating within a 10 or 12-hour window.
Don't snack before bed.
Try to have the same bedtime, get off your technology an hour or 2 before, practice
some active relaxation, huge impact on your health.
Step 3 is adding the supplements.
Now, you don't have to do this, but I really encourage you to have a multibitamin,
magnesium, vitamin D, and potentially fish oil.
And we're going to list which products you should take in the donuts.
You have it all listed there.
Also, what you should eat and what you should avoid during your
your 1080 talk, let's go through that.
So here's a full food list.
You can, you know, we're going to have it in the show notes.
You can take it within the store.
It's in the book, the 1080 talks.
It's in the 1080 talks cookbook.
But essentially, here's what you should eat and what you should actually get rid of.
What you should eat is protein.
You need to write protein, right?
So grass-fed or regionally raised meats is great.
You can have pap raised lamb, beef, bison, venison, elk, grass-fed beef,
Posterous chicken, turkey, duck, all that's fine.
What you should avoid is conventionally raised chicken and poultry and eggs and so forth.
And by the way, you can also have eggs that are pasturized eggs.
Meat, get rid of all processed meats, deli meats, all conventionally raised feedlot meats, get rid of all that stuff.
But about fish and seafood.
Lots of small fish are good, big fish are bad, right?
Big fish like swordfish, tuna, feeling sea bath, halibate, most farm-ish fish are
pretty bad for you. What you should be consuming are things like the, I call this
mashfish, small wild salmon, sardines, anchovies, herring, a mackerel. You can have
black cod, shrimp, scallop, trout, all those are fine. Eggs, as I said, pastures eggs are
fine, non-organic, regular eggs are not fine. What about nuts and seeds? Very important.
Amids, Brazil nuts, cashew nuts, hazelnuts, macadamia, pecans, pine nuts, pistachios, walnuts,
all that's great. You can even have to catas and cats.
pounded chocolate, not actually chocolate, but for chocolate it comes from.
Seeds are great.
Chia seeds, flak seeds, hemp seeds, pumpkin seeds, sesame seeds, sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds,
all great.
Nut butters also great.
So unsweetened nut butter, so almond, cashew, pecan, mechandia, I love mechidemia.
Walnut.
Oh, that's great.
You also eat beans if you're a vegan and you want to do this, you can use GMO-free or non-GMO,
tofu or tempe as your protein what you should avoid are nuts there with sugar they're cooked
in oils that are with gasey candied stuff a lot of nut butters have sugar hydrogenate fats
peanut butter peanuts can be okay but i would say mostly avoid peanuts because uh they have aphotoxin
they often are rancid uh and so you want to be careful with that um what about oils and fats well
The ones you want to use are organic avocado oil.
You can use organic coconut oil for cooking, grass-fed ghee.
If you want to use tallow, lard, duck fat, chicken fat, that's okay as long as their path to raise or regenerative raised for salads.
And you can use different kinds of oils like almond oil, flax oil, hemp oil, macadamia oil, and convergent olive oil.
And you can cook with olive oil, but only like tomato sauces and things like that.
things that are not high heat.
Sesame oil, tahini is great as well, great fat, sesame seed kind of paste walnut oil.
Those are flavorful oils are not made wells.
But you want to avoid the traditional oils, all the seed oils, canola oil, partially hydrogenated
oils, margarine, peanut oil, soybean oil, sunflower oil, saffler oil, trans fats, vegetable oil,
vegetable oil, vegetable shortening, all that stuff bad.
What about veggies?
What should you eat?
Well, you want to stick with lots of non-targy veggies or archokes, organic if you can.
I use the Dirty Dozen Guide from the Environmental Working Group,
EWG.org.
I'll tell you which are the Clean 15, meaning you can eat them
not organic or the Dirty Dousin, which you definitely not eat
if they're not organic.
But I love asparagus, artichokes, avocado, bean sprouts, broccoli,
Brussels, Brussels, cabbage, cauliflower, celery, cucumber, eggplant,
garlic, ginger, hearts of palm,
Korabi, leaky greens, mushrooms of all kinds,
onions, peppers, radicular, radish, fruit of bagas,
all the kind of stuff.
wheat is great, lots of minerals, shallots, summer squash, tomatoes, turnips, zucchini.
The list goes on.
We have it all in there.
You can have some things like sweet potatoes.
I like the Japanese purple sweet potatoes, winter squash, carrots, pumpkin.
All that's fine.
I mean, carrots are fine because unless you're doing carrot juice or that's a problem.
But basically try to limit to like one serving, which is like half a cup a day.
What you should be avoiding is corn and white potatoes, mostly.
A little, you know, some of the little tingling potatoes or the,
Peruvian potatoes, primal potatoes, it can be fine.
What about dairy?
You can eat pasteur-raised, butter, or ghee,
but I encourage to you to get up all dairy,
including sheep and goat, which are mostly fine for people,
but I encourage you to just get all other dairy.
And if you're having, he encouraged you to have,
make sure it's grass-fed or we're generally raised.
What about beans?
Well, you can have green beans.
You can have green peas.
You can have non-GMO or organic soy,
that's just tofu or tempe.
Uh, you can have snap beans.
You can have snow peas.
Um, but otherwise, definitely no, no beans.
Uh, what about grains?
No grains at all.
So, uh, even healthy grains, quinoa, buckwheat, things like that, I can't
really get up off, off all that.
Why?
Because it just shuts down the insulin response, helps people lose weight, reduce inflammation.
Not that these are necessarily all bad, but eventually you can add them back,
but basically get rid of all, all grains, wheat, barley, rice, right?
Amaran, Militev, oats, everything.
Uh,
get rid of it. Fruit. Fruit can be okay, but small amounts of non-hyglycemic fruit.
So organic blackberries, blueberries, blueberries, kiwi, lemons, lines, raspberries, all that's fine.
Not too much, right? You don't mean like, you know, two pounds of blueberries, but you can have a
top, half a cup a day. I want to get rid of all the other fruit, all the high glycemic fruit,
like bananas, pineapple, melons, cherries, braids, those are the worst. Even foods that, fruits are you
I think, you know, maybe good for you, are actually good for you, right?
Whether it's, you know, peaches, pears, nectarines, cherries, for example.
But you don't want to eat them while you're on the 10-day detox.
You want to really shut down the blood sugar and some response.
What about sugar sweeteners?
Sorry, none.
You can sometimes have a little monk fruit or cibia.
You have in the shake, we have, but generally they tend to avoid all that stuff.
Also, just get rid of all the other artificial sweeteners, all that stuff.
If you have to ask, the answer is no, basically.
Then what should you be drinking?
Well, lots of water, herbal tea, green tea, all this got a lot of caffeine, that's okay.
A little green tea is fine.
You'll have to get off coffee, sparkling water, mineral water, all that's fine.
Well, you should avoid, alcohol, coffee, bottled water, plastic, soda, obviously sugary beverages.
Basically, that's the program.
So if you eat that way for 10 days, if you use those simple habits,
your body is going to totally transform,
and you're going to see just how food is impacting your health,
which is the thing most people don't have a clue about.
And that's why I love this so much.
Now, after the program, it's really important if you do it for 10 days
or 21 days or 10 weeks or 10 months,
you have to be smart about getting off it
or you can get into big trouble.
Because when you go off of foods that are inflammatory,
foods they're allergic to, and then you reintroduce them, you can get a lot worse symptoms.
Let's say you had migraines before and then they're gone.
Wow, you're going to get a duty of a migraine.
Or unless you had gut issues before, you had a real problem.
Unless you had sinus congestion from eating dairy and then you eat it again, you might get a science infection.
So you really have to be smart.
So if you're feeling great, you want to continue and you let's say have a lot of weight to lose,
let's say you have an autoimmune disease.
Let's say you feel great, you want to continue.
No problem.
You continue to do it.
You can do it for another 10 days.
You can do it for another 10 months.
fine. It's totally safe to eat. And it's pretty much how I eat most of the time with
occasionally grains and beans. Also prioritize sleep and obviously your fasting window,
not eating before bed. And then eventually, people can transition slowly to the Pagan diet,
which incorporates a lot of the principles of the 10-D detox diet, but it gets you more flexibility
in your diet. You can add some gluten-free grains. You can have some grass-fed dairy or sheep
or goat. Maybe you want to do it most of the time, but you know, occasionally I would go out
the wine or dessert, occasionally, all that's fine.
Remember, when you're adding things back, you want to do it smartly.
And in the 10-a-Dotox book, we'll put in the show notes, you have to add one thing
at a time.
So if you're adding back gluten, just do that for three days.
Don't have a pizza, which has gluten and dairy.
You don't know what is affecting if you feel bad.
You want to know.
So give yourself three days and then pick the next week.
So start gluten, then dairy, then grains, other grains, and whatever.
And you'll slowly add foods back and you'll see how you feel.
And that's your best barometer.
The smartest doctor in the room is your own body, and that's what you want to focus on.
So congratulations.
Hopefully you're going to do this.
I think of gratitude in advance.
You're going to take the first steps for optimal health kind of hard.
Sometimes to kind of know what to think or feel, but I always say, don't listen to me.
Listen to your body.
It's the smartest doctor in the room.
Try this.
See what happens.
It doesn't work.
10 days, who cares, right?
If it works, you have the answer and the key to unlock some of your help.
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This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center,
my work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health, where I am chief medical officer.
This podcast represents my opinions and my guest's opinions.
Neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests.
This podcast is for educational purposes only, and is not a substitute for professional
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This podcast is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute medical or
other professional advice or services.
If you're looking for help in your journey, please seek
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